10 Reasons Why You Might Want to Avoid Dr. Gert Schilderoth, Professionally and Personally
Between 2023 and 2025, I was under treatment at Centro Dental Dr. Schilderoth in Alfaz del Pi, and as a result, I lost several healthy teeth. During this time, I discovered that there are other patients whom Dr. Schilderoth treated so poorly that their teeth could no longer be saved after his treatment. Whenever one expresses dissatisfaction, one is ignored and hindered in seeking clarification, as he only releases the patient file after a three-month waiting period and only after contacting the responsible dental association for help. Even then, I received an incomplete patient file with missing documents. What I have experienced with Dr. Schilderoth and found out about him, I am publishing here. For example, some of the positive reviews appear very questionable, suggesting that Dr. Schilderoth asks patients who are also his friends or colleagues to post positive reviews in order to distract from negative experiences. It can also be verified that he publicly searched online for advice on how to remove Google reviews.
- Dr. Schilderoth makes efforts to remove negative reviews, while at the same time actively seeks to obtain positive reviews from patients who are also „friends/colleagues“
In an old Facebook post, Mary Kleinpeter thanked Dr. Schilderoth’s office for showcasing her artwork. Shortly after, she left him a 5-star review — interestingly, right around the time his rating had dropped due to a string of negative reviews.
2. Missing documentation of important treatments in my medical records
Dr. Schilderoth placed little importance on maintaining proper treatment records and simply omitted documentation of important procedures — for example, the second grinding of my teeth 35 and 36. This second procedure only became necessary because the dental bridge that Dr. Schilderoth had cemented (!) came loose after just two months. Before that, three temporary crowns he had placed had already fallen off.
Shortly after the second grinding, the second tooth (36) became inflamed. In fact, that tooth probably should not have been ground a second time, since after the first grinding Dr. Schilderoth had already mentioned that he had to work very close to the tooth’s nerve — in response to my question after the grinding and placement of the temporary crowns about why my teeth were feeling so extremely sensitive.
By the way, the treatment records are not comprehensible to the patient.
Here you can see Dr. Schilderoth’s original treatment records: